They're using two cardioids at 90°--a setup which results in an extremely wide (180°) stereophonic recording angle. The sound sources that you're trying to record would have to fill an unusually wide arc in real space, relative to the microphones, in order to be spread across the virtual space between your loudspeakers in playback.
That could work for recording business meetings, or for headphone-oriented recording in general, but not usually for live music outside of a studio environment if the goal for the recording is to sound good over loudspeakers. If it's a solo performer and you're a foot or two away, OK, or if a group of performers fans out into something like a semi-circle and you place the microphones at the focal point. But if you record a performance from anywhere farther back, the direct sound pickup would occupy only a more or less narrow range of left/right space in the reproduced stereo image, i.e. the reproduction of the actual music would be essentially mono, with only the mid- and high-frequency room sound getting picked up in any degree of stereo.
I guess this arrangement has become something of a visual trademark for them, which their marketing people probably think is great, but in terms of recording quality it's not a good corner to be painted into in my opinion.